| Literature DB >> 22069553 |
Elisabeth Ersvaer1, Astrid Olsnes Kittang, Peter Hampson, Kristoffer Sand, Bjørn Tore Gjertsen, Janet M Lord, Oystein Bruserud.
Abstract
The diterpene ester ingenol-3-angelate (referred to as PEP005) is derived from the plant Euphorbia peplus. Crude euphorbia extract causes local toxicity and transient inflammation when applied topically and has been used in the treatment of warts, skin keratoses and skin cancer. PEP005 is a broad range activator of the classical (α, β, γ) and novel (δ, ε, η, θ) protein kinase C isoenzymes. Direct pro-apoptotic effects of this drug have been demonstrated in several malignant cells, including melanoma cell lines and primary human acute myelogenous leukemia cells. At micromolar concentrations required to kill melanoma cells this agent causes PKC-independent secondary necrosis. In contrast, the killing of leukemic cells occurs in the nanomolar range, requires activation of protein kinase C δ (PKCδ) and is specifically associated with translocation of PKCδ from the cytoplasm to the nuclear membrane. However, in addition to this pro-apoptotic effect the agent seems to have immunostimulatory effects, including: (i) increased chemokine release by malignant cells; (ii) a general increase in proliferation and cytokine release by activated T cells, including T cells derived from patients with chemotherapy-induced lymphopenia; (iii) local infiltration of neutrophils after topical application with increased antibody-dependent cytotoxicity; and (iv) development of specific anti-cancer immune responses by CD8(+) T cells in animal models. Published studies mainly describe effects from in vitro investigations or after topical application of the agent, and careful evaluation of the toxicity after systemic administration is required before the possible use of this agent in the treatment of malignancies other than skin cancers.Entities:
Keywords: cancer-protein kinase C-PEP005
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22069553 PMCID: PMC3206618 DOI: 10.3390/toxins2010174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Classification of PKC isoforms (8-11).
| Classical isoforms cPKC | Novel isoforms nPKC | Atypical isoforms aPKC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| α, βI, βII, γ | δ, ε, η, μ, θ | ζ, ι/λ | |
| Yes | Yes | No | |
| Diacylglycerol | Diacylglycerol | Independent of Ca and diacylglycerol | |
| Phosphatidyl-serine | Ca-independent | ||
| Ca | |||
| Antiapoptotic: α, βI, βII | Antiapoptotic: ε | Antiapoptotic: ζ | |
| Proapoptotic: δ |
Altered PKC expression in human cancers.
| Tumor Type | Expression | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Bladder | Increased | [ | |
| Brain | Decreased | [ | |
| Brain | Increased | [ | |
| Breast | Decreased | [ | |
| Ovarian | Decreased | [ | |
| Renal | Decreased | [ | |
| Colon | Decreased | [ | |
| T-cell leukemia | Decreased | [ | |
| Bladder | Decreased | [ | |
| Colon | Decreased | [ | |
| Prostate | Decreased | [ | |
| T-cell leukemia | Decreased | [ | |
| Melanoma | Decreased | [ | |
| Bladder | Decreased | [ | |
| Bladder | Decreased | [ | |
| Colon | Decreased | [ | |
| DLBCL | Increased | [ | |
|
| |||
| Bladder | Decreased | [ | |
| Brain | Decreased | [ | |
| Colon | Increased | [ | |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | Decreased | [ | |
| Bladder | Increased | [ | |
| Brain | Increased | [ | |
| Breast | Increased | [ | |
| Colon | Decreased | [ | |
| Prostate | Increased | [ | |
| Thyroid | Decreased | [ | |
| Breast | Decreased | [ | |
| Colon | Decreased | [ | |
| Renal | Increased | [ | |
| Gastrointestinal stromal tumor | Increased | [ |
Figure 1The molecular structure of PKCδ (adapted from [45]). The molecule has a regulatory and a kinase domain. The Novel C2 domain of the regulatory part is Ca2+ insensitive in contrast to the conventional PKC’s C2 domains. The C1a and C1b parts can bind diacylglycerol (DAG) as well as phorbol esters. The pseudosubstrate (PS) domain has structural similarities to the substrate of the kinase domain and binds to the active site of the kinase domain. Binding of C2 and C1 to membrane structures will release the PS domain from the active site and make substrate binding possible. The Hinge domain is the cleavage site for Caspase 3, this cleavage occurs in the nucleus and results in the release of the δ-catalytic fragment (δCF) that corresponds to the kinase domain. Phosphorylation of several tyrosine and serine residues both in regulatory and kinase domain has been described. The overall phosphorylation pattern determines the intracellular compartmentalization of the enzyme. Among the kinases involved in phosphorylation of PKCδ are the non-receptor tyrosine kinases Abl and Src like kinase-Lyn.
Figure 2Intracellular compartmentalization of PKCδ. Phosphoinositide dependent kinase 1 (PDK1) is responsible for the initial activating phosphorylation of PKCδ; this enzyme can also phosphorylate PKCα and PKCβ as an initial activating event for these enzymes. If a pro-apoptotic signal is involved the activated PKCδ is thereafter translocated either to the nucleus or to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). After nuclear translocation caspase 3 cleavage results in the formation of the δCF fragment that has a pro-apoptotic effect either (i) via upregulation of Bax and subsequent mitochondrial release of cytochrome c, or (ii) via the cytoplasmatic mediators STAT1 and p73. Alternatively, the activated PKCδ can be exported from the nucleus by a mechanism involving dephosphorylation and subsequent molecular stabilization by Heat shock protein 70 (HSP70). The translocation to ER is initiated through cytoplasmatic association of activated PKCδ with the Abl kinase; this results in PKCδ phosphorylation and translocation of the p-PKCδ-Abl complex to ER where pro-apoptotic signaling is initiated either through Bax or through further translocation of the complex to the mitochondria [11,45,46,47].
Figure 3Effects of PEP005 in experimental skin cancer. (LEFT) Topical application of PEP005 causes high local drug concentrations with two direct effects; endothelial cell activation with neutrophil adhesion; and (ii) direct induction of necrosis in the malignant cells. (MIDDLE) There is transmigration and local neutrophil recruitment with a local inflammation. (RIGHT) Finally there is an antitumor humoral immune response leading to antibody-dependent cytotoxicity and eradication of residual cancer cells.
Figure 4A summary of direct and indirect anticancer effects of PEP005. PEP005 has direct effects on malignant cells leading to either necrosis or apoptosis depending on the drug concentration. High concentrations are relevant for topical application, whereas lower concentrations are more relevant for leukemic disease. The indirect effects that may contribute to the anticancer effects are: (i) increased T cell reactivity, including increased cytokine release; (ii) local recruitment of neutrophils, endothelial cell activation contributes to this; (iii) induction of anticancer humoral immune responses with enhanced antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC).